When developing an SPA, it is very convenient to get instant feedback after updating a Javascript, HTML or CSS file.
With React, this requires you start a development server with npm that handles requests for frontend resources:
But what about requests that must be processed by Vert.x? You will configure the project so that the frontend development server proxies API requests to the backend:
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A text editor or IDE
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Java 11 or higher
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Maven or Gradle
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Node
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npm -
npx, an NPM package runner
The code of this project contains Maven and Gradle build files that are functionally equivalent.
Add the vertx-web dependency in your Maven POM file:
pom.xmllink:pom.xml[role=include]Then add the exec-maven-plugin:
pom.xmllink:pom.xml[role=include]Let’s start with the backend service.
It shall handle requests on the /api/message path by retuning a greeting message:
src/main/java/io/vertx/howtos/react/BackendVerticle.javalink:src/main/java/io/vertx/howtos/react/BackendVerticle.java[role=include]-
A Vert.x Web
Routeis defined to match HTTP requests on the/api/messagepath -
The
Routehandler replies to requests with a greeting message -
The
StaticHandleris required to handle requests for static resources
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Important
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You may wonder why we need a StaticHandler if the frontend development server handles static resources?
Keep in mind that when the whole application is built and put to production, the frontend will be bundled with and served by the backend HTTP server.
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Before we can test the implementation, the BackendVerticle needs a main method:
src/main/java/io/vertx/howtos/react/BackendVerticle.javalink:src/main/java/io/vertx/howtos/react/BackendVerticle.java[role=include]-
Create a
Vertxcontext -
Deploy
BackendVerticle
You can run the application:
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straight from your IDE or,
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with Maven:
mvn compile exec:java, or -
with Gradle:
./gradlew run(Linux, macOS) orgradlew run(Windows).
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Note
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The following example uses the HTTPie command line HTTP client. Please refer to the installation documentation if you don’t have it installed on your system yet. |
To receive a greeting, open your terminal and execute this:
http :8080/api/messageYou should see:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
content-length: 24
Hello React from Vert.x!We have a fully operational backend, we can create the frontend.
To do so, run the create-react-app package with npx:
cd src/main
npx create-react-app frontendThis will:
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create a
package.jsonfile that defines dependencies as well as build and run scripts -
install the dependencies
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generate a skeleton application
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Note
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In this how-to, the frontend code lives as part of the backend project, inside the src directory.
This is easier to get started, in particular if your team includes more backend-oriented developers.
However, as you project grows, you might prefer to split the frontend and the backend into separate modules.
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The skeleton application is not of great interest here so let’s remove it:
rm -rf frontend/src/*Then open your favorite editor and implement the React frontend:
src/main/frontend/src/index.jslink:src/main/frontend/src/index.js[role=include]-
Our frontend consists in a single React
Greetercomponent -
The
Greetercomponent holds state, which is a message to display in the browser -
The message is displayed within a simple HTML
span -
The
Greetercomponent is rendered in the web page -
After initial rendering, an HTTP request is sent to the backend; the result is used to udpate the component state
Last but not least, you must configure the frontend development server to proxy API requests to the backend.
Open the package.json file in you editor and add:
src/main/frontend/package.json"proxy": "http://localhost:8080"That’s it, open a terminal and start the frontend development server:
cd src/main/frontend
npm startA browser tab should automatically be opened and pointing to http://localhost:3000.
You should see:
Hello React from Vert.x!
In production of course you will not start a frontend development server. So the Maven POM (or Gradle build) file shall be configured to:
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run a frontend build
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copy the static files to the
src/main/resources/webrootfolder
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Note
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Do you remember the StaticHandler from the first section?
It looks for static files in the webroot folder by default.
This is why you must copy static files to src/main/resources/webroot.
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Add these plugins to your Maven POM file:
pom.xmllink:pom.xml[role=include]-
Downloading Node and
npmin the build directory allows to run the frontend build on CI where they might not be present -
Download frontend dependencies with
npm install -
Create a production-ready build of the frontend
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Copy static files to
src/main/resources/webroot
If you use Gradle, first add the Gradle NPM plugin:
build.gradle.ktslink:build.gradle.kts[role=include]Then the configuration is similar to what we did with Maven:
build.gradle.ktslink:build.gradle.kts[role=include]Make sure all previous npm, mvn or gradlew executions are terminated and start the Vert.x server:
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with Maven:
mvn compile exec:java, or -
with Gradle:
./gradlew run(Linux, macOS) orgradlew run(Windows).
Browse to http://localhost:8080 and you should see:
Hello React from Vert.x!
This document covered:
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the creation of a new React application with
create-react-app -
running a frontend development server (for live-reload) that delegates API requests to the Vert.x backend
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bundling the frontend static files together with the Vert.x classes when going to production